MATRIXSYNTH


Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Oberheim OB-1

images via this auction

MOOG Prodigy - Signed by Bob MOOG

images via this auction

Details (not me):
"I met Bob Moog in the winter of 1996 at the Zounds store in Chicago. He signed this synth for me. Bob was an amazing man. A humble man, A true scientist with a spiritual side that ran deep. There are those who would insist on a minimoog model D. But the prodigy is much more stable. This is my very first piece of gear. I learned about synthesis on this prodigy. This is truley my prized possesion. Flawless condition. Moog bass sounds that cannot be replicated anywhere."

Monday, November 26, 2007

åäåäåsersrslkrlsröskralsöflasölfdkflfkeäasåfäåaseäfåasäeåfä


YouTube via sounde2. Roland Jupiter-8.

VSM Virtual String Machine


More info on Sonic State.

dotcom & cotk filters - modular synth


YouTube via ohrspace. via Nusonica.
"dotcom Q107 filter + cotk C905A filter"

Top 5 Greatest Samplers - Episode 5


More info on Sonic State. All episodes posted here.

zoom


YouTube via PlastikOD. ZOOM Rhythmtrack 234.
I wonder what happened to these guys?

Korg EX-8000 DWGS Hybrid Synthesizer (DW-8000)


YouTube via retrosound72.
"some self-made retro-sounds from my Korg EX-8000 DWGS Synthesizer. more info: www.retrosound.de"

Workspace and Environment: Deru on trash_audio

"What is your favorite piece of hardware?
I guess I have two favorites right now. One would be my Cwejman MKII analog synth. It sounds fantastic. It's got really quick envelopes and the oscillators sound dope. It's semi-modular so it allows for a lot of manipulation. I built a Max patch for it that does step and random sequencing. The combination of the precision from digital sequencing with the analog sound is tight. The other piece of gear that I love is my Avedis E27 eq's. They're 500 series so they fit in an API Lunchbox. They're the kind of eq's where anything you send threw them sounds better. I'm constantly on the search for gear like this. It's like magic. You can bypass them and send audio threw and it still sounds better. I want to find a compressor like this."

click here for the full interview including more images on trash_audio.

Tellun Doomsday Machine front


flickr by sduck409 (click for more including some of the inside).

"The TLN-712 Doomsday Machine is a voltage controlled waveform animator for modular synthesizers. Originally conceived as two separate modules, the TLN-712 comprises two different animation circuits and four voltage-controlled LFOs (low frequency oscillators). The first animator (Thalaran Radiation Emitter) is based on the Multi-Phase Waveform Animator by Bernie Hutchins. The second animator (Cascading Biogenic Pulse) is based on the Pulse Width Multiplier by Craig Anderton. Both animators have been combined into one module along with four LFOs to create a self contained system that makes optimal use of panel space. All you need to add is a single oscillator and a few patch cords to create a marvelous mayhem of sonic madness. Add a second oscillator and you'll never get a date to the prom."

More info at Tellun.
PREVIOUS PAGE NEXT PAGE HOME



Switched On Make Synthesizer Evolution Vintage Synthesizers Creating Sound Fundlementals of Synthesizer Programming Kraftwerk

© Matrixsynth - All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within fair use.
MATRIXSYNTH is supported by affiliate links that use cookies to track clickthroughs and sales. See the privacy policy for details.
MATRIXSYNTH - EVERYTHING SYNTH